Kapalika and Kalamukhamembers of either of two groups of Shaivite (devotees of Shiva) ascetics, most prominent in India from the 8th through the 13th century, who became notorious for their practices of worship, which included the esoteric rites and animal and human sacrifice. They were successors of the Pashupatas, an early sect that worshipped Shiva according to “animal” (pashu)—that is, antisocial—vows.

The Kapalikas (worshippers of Kapalin, the skull bearer, a name of Shiva) and the Kalamukhas (black-faced, so called because of the black mark, or tilaka, customarily worn on their foreheads) were often confused. They were both designated as mahavratins (“observers of the great vows”), referring to a 12-year vow of rigorous self-abnegation that was said to follow the sacrifice of a Brahman or other high-ranking person, in imitation of Shiva’s act of severing one of Brahma’s five heads. During this time ascetics ate and drank from the skull of the person so sacrificed and followed tantric (esoteric) practices such as going naked, eating the flesh of the dead, smearing themselves with the ashes of corpses, and frequenting lonely cremation grounds where they meditated on the yoni, the symbol of the female sexual organgoddess Shakti. Other Shaivites in particular were enraged by such practices.

Some otherwise puzzling sculptures on medieval Indian temples are sometimes explained as depicting Kapalika ascetics. An inscription at Igatpuri in Nasik district (Maharashtra state) confirms that the Kapalika were well established in that region in the 7th century; another important centre was probably Shriparvata (modern Nagarjunikonda), in Andhra Pradesh, and they apparently spread throughout India. In an 8th-century Sanskrit drama, Malatimadhava, the heroine narrowly escapes being sacrificed to the goddess Camunda by a pair of Kapalika ascetics. Successors to the Kapalikas in modern times are the Aghoris, or Aghorapanthis.